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Research and deployment priorities for renewable technologies: Quantifying the importance of various renewable technologies for low cost,high renewable electricity systems in an Australian case study
Affiliation:1. Department of Energy Conversion and Storage, Technical University of Denmark, Risø Campus, Frederiksborgvej 399, Denmark;2. Department of Energy Technology, Aalborg University, Denmark;3. Energy Research Institute, National Development and Reform Commission, Beijing, China;4. Environmental & Energy Engineering College, Key Laboratory of Beijing on Regional Air Pollution Control, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing, China;1. Center for Low Carbon Society Strategy, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Japan;2. Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Systems, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Japan;3. Urban Institute, Urban Engineering & Economics Lab., Departments of Urban and Environmental Engineering, School of Engineering, Kyushu University, Japan;1. Institute for Renewable and Sustainable Energy Systems, Technische Universität München, Arcisstr. 21, 80333 Munich, Germany;2. ifo Center for Energy, Climate and Exhaustible Resources, ifo Institute, Poschingerstr. 5, 81679 Munich, Germany
Abstract:This study aims to identify research priorities to enable low cost, high renewable power systems. An evolutionary program optimises the mix of technologies in 100% renewable energy portfolios (RE) in the Australian National Electricity Market. Various technologies are reduced in availability to determine their relative importance for achieving low costs. The single most important factor is found to be the integration of large quantities of wind; therefore wind integration is identified as a research priority. In contrast, photovoltaics are found to “saturate” the system at less than 10% of total energy (in the absence of storage or demand management, installation of further photovoltaics does not contribute significant further value). This indicates that policies to promote utility-scale photovoltaics should be considered in partnership with complementary measures (such as demand side participation and storage). Biofuelled gas turbines are found to be important; a complete absence of bioenergy increases costs by AU$20–30/MWh, and even having only 0.1 TWh per year of bioenergy available reduces average costs by AU$3–4/MWh. Limits on the non-synchronous penetration (NSP) are found to be relatively expensive, suggesting a significant research priority around finding alternative approaches to providing synchronous services, such as inertia. Geothermal and concentrating solar thermal technologies do not appear essential as long as sufficient wind and peaking bioenergy is available.
Keywords:Renewable energy  Evolutionary program  Research priorities  Australian National Electricity Market  Portfolio optimisation
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